Last week I took part in 'Carousel', a tribute to Jacques Brel at
the Barbican. I'd been fairly familiar with his work, but having worked
on it closely I now want to learn some proper French so that I can
fully appreciate his incredible lyrics. The concert mixed French,
English and Belgian singers - from Mark Almond and Momus to Arthur H
and Arno - and as part of the house band I could more or less just sit
back and enjoy. A non-musical highlight was hearing Arthur H translate
the lyrics to 'Madeleine' for the audience: "She is all my life, we
will eat goooood French fries...", which made everyone in the room fall
in love with him immediately. I got to use my favourite guitar - a 60s
Italian thing made of sparkly plastic, with an enormous unforgiving
neck, that sounds like it's being played straight out of an old valve
record player. It doesn't get out much, but it made it onto the next
Paloma Faith single too.
The week before, I was in with a new artist called Delta Maid.
The producer was Craig Leon, a man of bafflingly and humblingly diverse
talents, who has worked with everyone from Bob Marley and Blondie to
Suicide and Pavarotti! It was fantastic to see a true master of
arranging and producing at work (when we weren't too busy getting him
to tell us stories from his past). The music, which was steeped in
traditions that I am by no means an expert on, was beautiful.
Unbelievably it was Delta's first experience playing with other
musicians, but it didn't show; a couple of times I sensed that I wasn't
quite getting the authentic feel she wanted, so I just got Craig to
play those bits! After all, he was actually there for the 'real thing'.
The combination ended up working really well.
I went to Belfast
with Jon Hopkins, for some sessions with David Holmes on a new film
he's scoring called 'Gustav'. It is Russian, and as beautiful as it is
grim. Jon and I basically spent 3 days improvising under David's
direction, and generated a load of material for David to sort through
and tailor. I ended up playing a lot of guitaret (the rare thumb
piano-like instrument that Eno gave me), and a £50 ukelele that David
had bought recently. It was just a toy really, but played into his
£3000 microphone, all the little imperfections and finger noises
sounded very intense and atmospheric. When we got back, I played at one
of Jon's shows. Even in the thundering maelstrom of his live set, what
he wants from his musicians is incredibly specific, and I felt slightly
as though I was walking on eggshells; but I think it worked just having
other people on stage (he usually plays alone), andthe quiet bits took me back 15 years to when we used to play together at school concerts.
The Josephine Oniyama record got finished a few weeks ago. The last
4 or 5 days were spent mixing, and once again Josephine was
extraordinarily patient during the boring bits (actually it's all quite
boring by then), inspired and passionate when called on to sing,
supportive when I wobbled, and generally lovely to be around. The head
of the record company came down and made some very useful suggestions -
usually that is a moment to be dreaded but he comes from a musical
background and was very helpful. The record deserves to do well. I also
kept up the work on Iarla O'Lionaird's album - adding a variety of
strange and outsized bass instruments courtesy of Simon Edwards. I
still feel this huge responsibility because of how much I love what
Iarla does, but every time I hear his voice coming back through the
speakers it inspires me.
I did a session for Skye Edwards (from Morcheeba), for a John Martyn
tribute record - I had a bit of a hangover and hopefully it didn't show
too much. I hardly ever have them on sessions because it's a bit
miserable and scary, but luckily it was Skye's honeyed voice coming
through the speakers rather than something abrasive. There was also a
day with film composer Alex Heffes, and Seb Rochford came to my studio
with an artist he's producing called Jay Brown (sister of VV). We
managed to get 2 full tracks done in a day, and I just had to engineer
- doing that alone is quite rare for me but I really enjoyed it,
because I got to concentrate purely on mic positions and sounds,
without the distraction of also having to play and produce. Seb played
some absolutely incredible percussion, glass marimba and bass in
addition to the drums, and we even got Jay's managers to add handclaps
at the end of the day.
And in between, I wrote a few songs with
Chris Difford (of Squeeze); although not technically 'with', as he
wasn't there. But he sent me lyrics and asked me to come up with some
music. I'd never worked that way before but found it incredibly
inspiring. His words are like fully fleshed-out stories, and music just
seems to rise out of them like a lovely aroma. I did 6 or 7 in a couple
of days, and hopefully a few of them will go the distance.